Rail line relocation on Kinew's radar, but not reopening Portage and Main - Action News
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Manitoba

Rail line relocation on Kinew's radar, but not reopening Portage and Main

It's been talked about for generations and could cost more than $1 billion, but the idea of relocating the rail lines that criss-cross and divide Winnipeg is up for discussion again.

Idea of moving rail lines dividing Winnipeg north-south has been raised since 1960s

Long lines of freight cars are seen in a rail yard
View of the rail yards in central Winnipeg from the Arlington Bridge. (Trevor Lyons/CBC)

It's been talked about for generationsand could cost more than $1 billion, but the idea of relocating the rail lines that criss-cross and divide Winnipeg is up for discussion again.

Premier Wab Kinew says he wants to look at whether the project could be done incrementally.

"This is something that's a hugely expensive potential proposition. But maybe if we look at it in a decades-long timeline ... rather than a next-year timeline, then maybe it is realistic," the Manitoba premier said in a year-end interview.

Mayor Scott Gillingham said he wants the idea explored, and has recently discussed it with Kinew and federal cabinet minister Dan Vandal. Any changes would also involve the major railway companies.

"I know it would be a huge cost, ultimately and complex but I'm wondering if we could explore whether or not there are some underutilized rail lines and spur lines that perhaps could be the first areas that could be examined," the mayor of Winnipeg said.

Proponents of rail relocation say it would increase safety because hazardous materials would no longer be transported through residential areas.

They also cite a desire to remove large rail yards that serve as barriers between neighbourhoods. The Arlington Bridge, which runs over a rail yard that divides central Winnipeg from northern neighbourhoods, was recently shut down indefinitely due to its aging structure, leaving motorists and pedestrians to navigate long detours.

Gillingham says moving rail lines could also free up land for housing development.

Last April, former premier Heather Stefanson raised the idea again after several rail cars carrying bitumen left the track near a rail overpass that runs over McPhillips Street a major route for commuters in the city's northwest.

The idea of moving rail lines has been brought up since the 1960s, and rough price estimates have pegged the cost well upwards of $1 billion.

In 2016, the NDP government of the day promised to spend $400,000 on a study to look at the cost and feasibility of moving rail lines. The province hired former Quebec premier Jean Charest to lead the effort.

Months later, the Progressive Conservatives were elected and then-premier Brian Pallister axed the plan.

Kinew said he wants to take a new look at the idea in the coming year.

"The first step would have to be a plan that answers the question, 'Is this feasible and if so, how could we pursue it in a way that's fiscally responsible,'" Kinew said.

"I think a study and answering some of those questions, particularly within our current capital restraint that we have at the provincial level, would be time well-spent."

Another long-discussed infrastructure project in Winnipeg opening the intersection of Portage Avenueand Main St is not on Kinew's agenda.

A sign says
A sign directs pedestrians underground at the northwest corner of Portage and Main. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

The downtown intersection was closed to pedestrians in 1979. People wanting to cross face concrete barriers and are forced underground into passageways that leave tourists confused and are difficult to navigate for people in wheelchairs.

"This is not really one of our government's priorities right now. Health care the economy, the deficit, these are things that are occupying a significant amount of our time," Kinew said.

Kinew said he voted against opening the intersection in a municipal plebiscite held in conjunction with Winnipeg's civic election in 2018.

Opponents of opening the intersection, who cited concerns such as increased traffic delays, won the vote.